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Sts. Cyril and Methodius
Feastday: February 14
Cyril and Methodius must have often wondered, as we
do today, how God could bring spiritual meaning out of worldly concerns.
Every mission they went on, every struggle they fought was a result
of political battles, not spiritual, and yet the political battles
are forgotten and their work lives on in the Slavic peoples and
their literature.
Tradition tells us that the brothers Methodius and
Constantine (he did not take the name Cyril until just before his
death) grew up in Thessalonica as sons of a prominent Christian
family. Because many Slavic people settled in Thessalonica, it is
assumed Constantine and Methodius were familiar with the Slavic
language. Methodius, the older of the two brothers, became an important
civil official who would have needed to know Slavonic. He grew tired
of worldly affairs and retired to a monastery. Constantine became
a scholar and a professor known as "the Philosopher" in Constantinople.
In 860 Constantine and Methodius went as missionaries to what is
today the Ukraine.
When the Byzantine emperor decided to honor a request
for missionaries by the Moravian prince Rastislav, Methodius and
Constantine were the natural choices; they knew the language, they
were able administrators, and had already proven themselves successful
missionaries.
But there was far more behind this request and the
response than a desire for Christianity. Rastislav, like the rest
of the Slav princes, was struggling for independence from German
influence and invasion. Christian missionaries from the East, to
replace missionaries from Germany, would help Rastislav consolidate
power in his own country, especially if they spoke the Slavonic
language.
Constantine and Methodius were dedicated to the ideal
of expression in a people's native language. Throughout their lives
they would battle against those who saw value only in Greek or Latin.
Before they even left on their mission, tradition says, Constantine
constructed a script for Slavonic -- a script that is known today
as glagolithic. Glagolithic is considered by some as the precursor
of cyrillic which named after him.
Arriving in 863 in Moravia, Constantine began translating
the liturgy into Slavonic. In the East, it was a normal procedure
to translate liturgy into the vernacular. As we know, in the West
the custom was to use Greek and later Latin, until Vatican II. The
German hierarchy, which had power over Moravia, used this difference
to combat the brothers' influence. The German priests didn't like
losing their control and knew that language has a great deal to
do with independence.
So when Constantine and Methodius went to Rome to
have the Slav priesthood candidates ordained (neither was a bishop
at the time), they had to face the criticism the Germans had leveled
against them. But if the Germans had motives that differed from
spiritual concerns, so did the pope. He was concerned about the
Eastern church gaining too much influence in the Slavic provinces.
Helping Constantine and Methodius would give the Roman Catholic
church more power in the area. So after speaking the brothers, the
pope approved the use of Slavonic in services and ordained their
pupils.
Constantine never returned to Moravia. He died in
Rome after assuming the monastic robes and the name Cyril on February
14, 1869. Legend tells us that his older brother was so griefstricken,
and perhaps upset by the political turmoil, that he intended to
withdraw to a monastery in Constantinople. Cyril's dying wish, however,
was that Methodius return to the missionary work they had begun.
He couldn't return to Moravia because of political problems there,
but another Slavic prince, Kocel, asked for him, having admired
the brothers' work in translating so much text into Slavonic. Methodius
was allowed by the pope to continue saying Mass and administering
baptism in the Slavonic tongue. Methodius was finally consecrated
bishop, once again because of politics -- Kocel knew that having
a Slavonic bishop would destroy the power of the Salzburg hierarchy
over his land. Methodius became bishop of Sirmium, an ancient see
near Belgrade and given power over Serbo-Croatian, Slovene, and
Moravian territory.
The German bishops accused him of infringing on their
power and imprisoned him in a monastery. This lasted until Germany
suffered military defeats in Moravia. At that time the pope intervened
and Methodius returned to his diocese in triumph at the same time
the Germans were forced to recognize Moravian independence. There
was a loss involved -- to appease the Germans a little, the pope
told Methodius he could no longer celebrate liturgy in the vernacular.
In 879 Methodius was summoned to Rome to answer German
charges he had not obeyed this restriction. This worked against
the Germans because it gave Methodius a chance to explain how important
it was to celebrate the liturgy in the tongue people understood.
Instead of condemning him, the pope gave him permission to use Slavonic
in the Mass, in Scripture reading, and in the office. He also made
him head of the hierarchy in Moravia.
The criticism never went away, but it never stopped
Methodius either. It is said that he translated almost all the Bible
and the works of the Fathers of the Church into Slavonic before
he died on April 6 in 884.
Within twenty years after his death, it would seem
like all the work of Cyril and Methodius was destroyed. Magyar invasions
devastated Moravia. And without the brothers to explain their position,
use of the vernacular in liturgy was banned. But politics could
never prevail over God's will. The disciples of Cyril and Methodius
who were driven out of Moravia didn't hide in a locked room. The
invasion and the ban gave them a chance to go to other Slavic countries.
The brothers' work of spreading Christ's word and translating it
into Slavonic continued and laid the foundation for Christianity
in the region.
What began as a request guided by political concerns
produced two of the greatest Christian missionaries, revered by
both Roman Catholic and Eastern Orthodox churches, and two of the
fathers of Slavonic literary culture.
In Their Footsteps:
Cyril and Methodius believed in the importance of celebrating liturgy
in our own language, a privilege we have only had in last twenty
years. If this change took place before your time, ask older Catholics
about the differences that have taken place in their worship because
of this change. If you were worshipping during the change, reflect
on how celebrating in the vernacular has helped your worship and
your spiritual life.
Prayer:
Saints Cyril and Methodius, watch over all missionaries but especially
those in Slavic countries. Help those that are in danger in the
troubled areas. Watch over the people you dedicated your lives to.
Amen
©1996 Terry Matz. All Rights Reserved.
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